How Can We Become Those Who Keep Pace with God’s Plan?

Jesus said to the servants, “Fill the jars with water”; so they filled them to the brim. John 2:7

How can we become those who keep pace with God’s plan and be used in God’s history? It requires attending the service well, reading the Bible well, praying well, and meditating on the Word of God well. In other words, it is to get the spiritual strength and the power of the Holy Spirit well. To get the power of the Holy Spirit, you need to be filled with the Holy Spirit. And to be filled with the Holy Spirit, you need to be filled with the Word of God, because the Holy Spirit is the spirit of truth. When you are filled with the truth and filled with the Word of God, you will naturally be filled with the Holy Spirit. If you want to be filled with God’s words, you need to constantly listen to God’s words and read God’s words, meditate on God’s words, keep God’s words in your heart and pray with God’s words.

This does not happen overnight, it needs continuous accumulation. Gaining the power of the Holy Spirit and gaining spiritual power is not something instant. There is a process from quantitative change to qualitative change, just like the 6 jars needs to be filled with water before it becomes wine. We need to continue to accumulate God’s words In our hearts, when we keep praying to focus on the Word of God, the power of God will come to us, and the power of spirituality will come in. So we need to keep doing it and practice until the six jars are filled with water, and we have to keep accumulating the word of God and wait until the qualitative changes. Prayer should not stop until it comes to a qualitative change. You should keep praying and accumulate, absolutely believe that God is listening to every prayer. Until you fill up the six jars with water, keep accumulating prayers, just accumulate to two mouthfuls. There will be no qualitative change in water if you just fill one jar or two jars or three jars. So no matter what you do, the most important thing is to establish the standards and don’t stop until the six jars are filled with water.